n-oleoylethanolamine and Diabetes-Mellitus--Type-2

n-oleoylethanolamine has been researched along with Diabetes-Mellitus--Type-2* in 6 studies

Reviews

1 review(s) available for n-oleoylethanolamine and Diabetes-Mellitus--Type-2

ArticleYear
Gut microbiota and oleoylethanolamide in the regulation of intestinal homeostasis.
    Frontiers in endocrinology, 2023, Volume: 14

    A vast literature strongly suggests that the endocannabinoid (eCB) system and related bioactive lipids (the paracannabinoid system) contribute to numerous physiological processes and are involved in pathological conditions such as obesity, type 2 diabetes, and intestinal inflammation. The gut paracannabinoid system exerts a prominent role in gut physiology as it affects motility, permeability, and inflammatory responses. Another important player in the regulation of host metabolism is the intestinal microbiota, as microorganisms are indispensable to protect the intestine against exogenous pathogens and potentially harmful resident microorganisms. In turn, the composition of the microbiota is regulated by intestinal immune responses. The intestinal microbial community plays a fundamental role in the development of the innate immune system and is essential in shaping adaptive immunity. The active interplay between microbiota and paracannabinoids is beginning to appear as potent regulatory system of the gastrointestinal homeostasis. In this context, oleoylethanolamide (OEA), a key component of the physiological systems involved in the regulation of dietary fat consumption, energy homeostasis, intestinal motility, and a key factor in modulating eating behavior, is a less studied lipid mediator. In the small intestine namely duodenum and jejunum, levels of OEA change according to the nutrient status as they decrease during food deprivation and increase upon refeeding. Recently, we and others showed that OEA treatment in rodents protects against inflammatory events and changes the intestinal microbiota composition. In this review, we briefly define the role of OEA and of the gut microbiota in intestinal homeostasis and recapitulate recent findings suggesting an interplay between OEA and the intestinal microorganisms.

    Topics: Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2; Endocannabinoids; Gastrointestinal Microbiome; Homeostasis; Humans

2023

Other Studies

5 other study(ies) available for n-oleoylethanolamine and Diabetes-Mellitus--Type-2

ArticleYear
Chronic oleoylethanolamide treatment attenuates diabetes-induced mice encephalopathy by triggering peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha in the hippocampus.
    Neurochemistry international, 2019, Volume: 129

    Brain is a site of diabetic end-organ damage. Diabetes-associated cognitive dysfunction, referred as "diabetic encephalopathy" (DE) has been coined for the patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus showing decline in their cognitive function, especially weak episodic memory, cognitive inflexibility and poor psychomotor performance leading towards Alzheimer's disease. Current evidence supported that aberrant synapses, energy metabolism imbalance, advanced glycation end products (AGEs) accumulation and Tau hyperphosphorylation are associated with cognition deficits induced by diabetes. Oleoylethanolamide (OEA), an endogenous peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha (PPARα) agonist, has anti-hyperlipidemia, anti-inflammatory and neuroprotective activities. However, the effect of OEA on DE is unknown. Therefore, we tested its influence against cognitive dysfunction in high fat diet and streptozotocin (HFD + STZ)-induced diabetic C57BL/6J and PPARα

    Topics: Animals; Blood Glucose; Brain Diseases; Cognition Disorders; Diabetes Mellitus, Experimental; Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2; Diet, High-Fat; Endocannabinoids; Glycation End Products, Advanced; Hippocampus; Insulin Resistance; Lipids; Male; Maze Learning; Memory Disorders; Mice; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Mice, Knockout; Neurogenesis; Neuronal Plasticity; Oleic Acids; PPAR alpha; Specific Pathogen-Free Organisms; Streptozocin; tau Proteins

2019
Synthesis and biological evaluation of 5-nitropyrimidine analogs with azabicyclic substituents as GPR119 agonists.
    Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, 2013, Mar-01, Volume: 23, Issue:5

    5-Nitropyrimidine analogs substituted with conformationally restricted azabicyclic amines and alcohols were prepared and evaluated their agonistic activity against human GPR119. The analogs bearing endo-azabicyclic amines and alcohols (7, 8, 11, and 12) exhibited full agonistic activities while the analogs with exo-azabicyclic amines and alcohols were proved as partial agonists (9, 10, 13, and 14) regardless of their EC(50) values. 5-Nitropyrimidine analogs with (2-fluoro-4-methylsulfonyl)phenylamino group (8, 10, 12, 14) showed more potent GPR119 activation activities than the analogs without fluorine in all cases (7, 9, 11, 13).

    Topics: Azabicyclo Compounds; Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2; Humans; Molecular Conformation; Pyrimidines; Receptors, G-Protein-Coupled; Structure-Activity Relationship

2013
Evaluation of the insulin releasing and antihyperglycaemic activities of GPR55 lipid agonists using clonal beta-cells, isolated pancreatic islets and mice.
    British journal of pharmacology, 2013, Volume: 170, Issue:5

    G-protein coupled receptor (GPR)55 is a novel lipid sensing receptor activated by both cannabinoid endogenous ligands (endocannabinoids) and other non-cannabinoid lipid transmitters. This study assessed the effects of various GPR55 agonists on glucose homeostasis.. Insulin secretion and changes in intracellular Ca(2) (+) and cAMP in response to glucose and a range of GPR55 agonists [endogenous ligands (OEA, PEA), chemically synthetic cannabidiol (CBD) analogues (Abn-CBD, 0-1602), an analogue of rimonabant (AM-251) and antagonist (CBD)] were investigated in clonal BRIN-BD11 cells and mouse pancreatic islets. Cytotoxicity was assessed by LDH release, cellular localization by double-staining immunohistochemistry and in vivo effects assessed in mice.. The most potent and selective GPR55 agonist was the synthetic CBD analogue, Abn-CBD (pEC50 10.33), maximum stimulation of 67% at 10(-4)  mol·L(-1) (P < 0.001) in BRIN-BD11 cells. AM-251 (pEC50 7.0), OEA (pEC50 7.0), 0-1602 (pEC50 7.3) and PEA (pEC50 6.0) stimulated insulin secretion. Results were corroborated by islet studies, with no cytotoxic effects. Concentration-dependent insulin secretion by GPR55 agonists was glucose-sensitive and accompanied by elevations of [Ca(2) (+) ]i (P < 0.01-P < 0.001) and cAMP (P < 0.05-P < 0.01). GPR55 agonists exhibited insulinotropic and glucose lowering activity in vivo. GPR55 was expressed on BRIN-BD11 cells and confined to islet beta cells with no distribution on alpha cells.. These results demonstrate GPR55 is distributed in pancreatic beta cells and is a strong activator of insulin secretion, with glucose-lowering effects in vivo. Development of agents agonizing the GPR55 receptor may have therapeutic potential in the treatment of type 2 diabetes.

    Topics: Animals; Blood Glucose; Calcium; Cannabidiol; Cell Line; Clone Cells; Cyclic AMP; Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2; Dose-Response Relationship, Drug; Ethanolamines; Hypoglycemic Agents; Insulin; Insulin Secretion; Insulin-Secreting Cells; Islets of Langerhans; Mice; Oleic Acids; Palmitic Acids; Piperidines; Pyrazoles; Rats; Receptors, Cannabinoid; Receptors, G-Protein-Coupled; Resorcinols; Time Factors

2013
Differential alterations of the concentrations of endocannabinoids and related lipids in the subcutaneous adipose tissue of obese diabetic patients.
    Lipids in health and disease, 2010, Apr-28, Volume: 9

    The endocannabinoids, anandamide and 2-AG, are produced by adipocytes, where they stimulate lipogenesis via cannabinoid CB1 receptors and are under the negative control of leptin and insulin. Endocannabinoid levels are elevated in the blood of obese individuals and nonobese type 2 diabetes patients. To date, no study has evaluated endocannabinoid levels in subcutaneous adipose tissue (SAT) of subjects with both obesity and type 2 diabetes (OBT2D), characterised by similar adiposity and whole body insulin resistance and lower plasma leptin levels as compared to non-diabetic obese subjects (OB).. The levels of anandamide and 2-AG, and of the anandamide-related PPARalpha ligands, oleoylethanolamide (OEA) and palmitoylethanolamide (PEA), in the SAT obtained by abdominal needle biopsy in 10 OBT2D, 11 OB, and 8 non-diabetic normal-weight (NW) subjects, were measured by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. All subjects underwent a hyperinsulinaemic euglycaemic clamp.. As compared to NW, anandamide, OEA and PEA levels in the SAT were 2-4.4-fold elevated (p < 0.05), and 2-AG levels 2.3-fold reduced (p < .05), in OBT2D but not in OB subjects. Anandamide, OEA and PEA correlated positively (p < .05) with SAT leptin mRNA and free fatty acid during hyperinsulinaemic clamp, and negatively with SAT LPL activity and plasma HDL-cholesterol, which were all specifically altered in OBT2D subjects.. The observed alterations emphasize, for the first time in humans, the potential different role and regulation of adipose tissue anandamide (and its congeners) and 2-AG in obesity and type 2 diabetes.

    Topics: Adiposity; Adult; Amides; Arachidonic Acids; Cannabinoid Receptor Modulators; Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2; Endocannabinoids; Ethanolamines; Female; Humans; Lipids; Male; Middle Aged; Obesity; Oleic Acids; Palmitic Acids; Polyunsaturated Alkamides; Subcutaneous Fat

2010
Role and regulation of acylethanolamides in energy balance: focus on adipocytes and beta-cells.
    British journal of pharmacology, 2007, Volume: 152, Issue:5

    The endocannabinoid, arachidonoylethanolamide (AEA), and the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR)-alpha ligand, oleylethanolamide (OEA) produce opposite effects on lipogenesis. The regulation of OEA and its anti-inflammatory congener, palmitoylethanolamide (PEA), in adipocytes and pancreatic beta-cells has not been investigated. We report here the results of studies on acylethanolamide regulation in these cells during obesity and hyperglycaemia, and provide an overview of acylethanolamide role in metabolic control. We analysed by liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry OEA and PEA levels in: 1) mouse 3T3F442A adipocytes during insulin-induced differentiation, 2) rat insulinoma RIN m5F beta-cells kept in 'low' or 'high' glucose, 3) adipose tissue and pancreas of mice with high fat diet-induced obesity (DIO), and 4) in visceral fat or blood of obese or type 2 diabetes (T2D) patients. In adipocytes, OEA levels remain unchanged during differentiation, whereas those of PEA decrease significantly, and are under the negative control of both leptin and PPAR-gamma. PEA is significantly downregulated in subcutaneous adipose tissue of DIO mice. In RIN m5F insulinoma beta-cells, OEA and PEA levels are inhibited by 'very high' glucose, this effect being enhanced by insulin, whereas in cells kept for 24 h in 'high' glucose, they are stimulated by both glucose and insulin. Elevated OEA and PEA levels are found in the blood of T2D patients. Reduced PEA levels in hypertrophic adipocytes might play a role in obesity-related pro-inflammatory states. In beta-cells and human blood, OEA and PEA are down- or up-regulated under conditions of transient or chronic hyperglycaemia, respectively.

    Topics: 3T3 Cells; Adipocytes; Adult; Aged; Amides; Animals; Arachidonic Acids; Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2; Endocannabinoids; Energy Metabolism; Ethanolamines; Female; Humans; Insulin-Secreting Cells; Leptin; Male; Mice; Mice, Inbred C57BL; Middle Aged; Models, Biological; Obesity; Oleic Acids; Palmitic Acids; Polyunsaturated Alkamides; PPAR gamma; Review Literature as Topic; Structure-Activity Relationship

2007